PASSENGERS
by Luca Piola
by Luca Piola
Limited Edition Artist book with prints, plexiglass slip-cased
Edition of 100 copies
size 20 x 26 cm / 7,9 x 10,2 inches
Hardcover
56 pages
Fedrigoni Splendorgel E.W. 190 gsm
24 Fine Art Glicée photographs on Moab Entrada Rag Bright 190 gsm printed with the artist
Prints size 6,22 x 4 ,4 inches
Hand bound with the artist
essay by Adriana Polveroni
Concept & Design by Luca Piola & blisterZine
Edition of 100 copies
size 20 x 26 cm / 7,9 x 10,2 inches
Hardcover
56 pages
Fedrigoni Splendorgel E.W. 190 gsm
24 Fine Art Glicée photographs on Moab Entrada Rag Bright 190 gsm printed with the artist
Prints size 6,22 x 4 ,4 inches
Hand bound with the artist
essay by Adriana Polveroni
Concept & Design by Luca Piola & blisterZine
With the book “Passengers”, Luca Piola closes the project that he started inside of America's museums. The study explores the relationship between the museum visitor and the museum space itself.
The book, both physically and conceptually, embodies the essence of the Museum: the book is bound in white wallpaper to represent the plaster on the museum’s wall; the title is fashioned with a thick label which is fastened to the cover like a caption flanking a work of art. The book begins and ends with a clear film on which three dots have been affixed as to remind one of museum doors.
For Luca Piola museum is a place that is distinct and different from the world outside, it takes you to a different place, both physically and mentally, making you drift towards different inner realities. He says: “When one enters a museum one enters another reality, another dimension of the reality that is life itself. You enter through the doors and everything outside becomes further away and almost disappears. I am interested in things that people feel and perceive in that space.
They enter a museum and it is as if they had boarded a train; they become passengers, ‘Passengers,’ on a trip toward other places in the mind. I record people in this liquid flow. I collect tracks from shreds of their mental explorations”.
They enter a museum and it is as if they had boarded a train; they become passengers, ‘Passengers,’ on a trip toward other places in the mind. I record people in this liquid flow. I collect tracks from shreds of their mental explorations”.